Abstract

This extensive literature compilation reviews major studies on estrogen metabolism in cancer, studies which have led to proposed possible etiological roles of estrogens in human breast cancer. Urinary and plasma estrogen excretion patterns and profiles in women with breast cancer are the topics of part 1. Studies of estrogen profiles in women who are at high-risk for breast cancer are critiqued. The estriol hypothesis is presented and criticised in a chapter. The effects of endocrine ablation on urinary estrogen profiles in breast cancer patients are compiled. Production and metabolism of estrogens in women with breast cancer are rendered, including in vivo biotransformation rates and in vitro transformation data. And the search for estrogen metabolites in women with breast cancer is reviewed. In conclusion it is obvious that the question of whether breast cancer patients have an abnormal metabolism of estrogen has not been answered, but further investigations of estrogen metabolism in breast cancer should be continued because: 1) the possibility that estrogens are carcinogenic has not been ruled out; 2) receptors have been discovered which do correlate with hormone dependency of tumors; 3) present evidence suggests that neoplasm may induce abnormal estrogen metabolism; 4) directional changes of estrogen metabolism that occur in pregnancy may also occur in women with target tissue neoplasia; 5) hepatic tissue's relationship to breast cancer has not received attention; and 6) the role of peripheral aromatization in the pathogenesis of mammary cancer is not yet understood.

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